Saturday, March 21, 2015

"According to Matt, he was sitting at his computer at home in
September 2009 when he received an urgent message from a friend. A
suspicious unencrypted folder of files had just been uploaded
anonymously to the Shell. When Matt opened the folder, he was startled
to find documents detailing the CIA’s role in assigning strike targets
for drones at the 181st.
Matt says he thought of his fellow
airmen, some of whom knew about the Shell. “I’m not going to say who I
think it was, but there was a lot of dissatisfaction in my unit about
cooperating with the CIA,” he says. Intelligence analysts with the
proper clearance (such as Manning and others) had access to a deep trove
of sensitive data on the Secret Internet Protocol Router Network, or
SIPRNet, the classified computer network used by both the Defense and
State departments.
As Matt read through the file, he says, he
discovered even more incendiary material among the 300-odd pages of
slides, documents, and handwritten notes. One folder contained what
appeared to be internal documents from an agrochemical company
expressing culpability for more than 13,000 deaths related to
genetically modified organisms. There was also what appeared to be
internal documents from the FBI, field notes on the bureau’s
investigation into the worst biological attack in U.S. history: the
anthrax-laced letters that killed five Americans and sickened 17 others
shortly after Sept. 11.Though the attacks were officially blamed
on a government scientist who committed suicide after he was identified
as a suspect, Matt says the documents on the Shell tell a far different
story. It had already been revealed
that the U.S. Army produced the Ames strain of anthrax — the same
strain used in the Amerithrax attacks — at the Dugway Proving Ground in
Utah. But the report built the case that the CIA was behind the attacks
as part of an operation to fuel public terror and build support for the
Iraq War.
Despite his intelligence training, Matt was no expert in
government files, but this one, he insists, featured all the hallmarks
of a legitimate document: the ponderous length, the bureaucratic
nomenclature, the monotonous accumulation of detail. If it wasn’t the
real thing, Matt thought, it was a remarkably sophisticated hoax. (The
FBI declined requests for comment.)"

"Missing WSJ Reporter’s Body Discovered in New Jersey River" One of the spate of deaths surrounding Wall Street and international banksters.

"Avaaz call for a ‘no-fly zone’ in Syria" "Avaaz: The Lobbyist that Masquerades as Online Activism"

"According to Matt, he was sitting at his computer at home in
September 2009 when he received an urgent message from a friend. A
suspicious unencrypted folder of files had just been uploaded
anonymously to the Shell. When Matt opened the folder, he was startled
to find documents detailing the CIA’s role in assigning strike targets
for drones at the 181st.
Matt says he thought of his fellow
airmen, some of whom knew about the Shell. “I’m not going to say who I
think it was, but there was a lot of dissatisfaction in my unit about
cooperating with the CIA,” he says. Intelligence analysts with the
proper clearance (such as Manning and others) had access to a deep trove
of sensitive data on the Secret Internet Protocol Router Network, or
SIPRNet, the classified computer network used by both the Defense and
State departments.
As Matt read through the file, he says, he
discovered even more incendiary material among the 300-odd pages of
slides, documents, and handwritten notes. One folder contained what
appeared to be internal documents from an agrochemical company
expressing culpability for more than 13,000 deaths related to
genetically modified organisms. There was also what appeared to be
internal documents from the FBI, field notes on the bureau’s
investigation into the worst biological attack in U.S. history: the
anthrax-laced letters that killed five Americans and sickened 17 others
shortly after Sept. 11.Though the attacks were officially blamed
on a government scientist who committed suicide after he was identified
as a suspect, Matt says the documents on the Shell tell a far different
story. It had already been revealed
that the U.S. Army produced the Ames strain of anthrax — the same
strain used in the Amerithrax attacks — at the Dugway Proving Ground in
Utah. But the report built the case that the CIA was behind the attacks
as part of an operation to fuel public terror and build support for the
Iraq War.
Despite his intelligence training, Matt was no expert in
government files, but this one, he insists, featured all the hallmarks
of a legitimate document: the ponderous length, the bureaucratic
nomenclature, the monotonous accumulation of detail. If it wasn’t the
real thing, Matt thought, it was a remarkably sophisticated hoax. (The
FBI declined requests for comment.)"

"Missing WSJ Reporter’s Body Discovered in New Jersey River" One of the spate of deaths surrounding Wall Street and international banksters.

"Avaaz call for a ‘no-fly zone’ in Syria" "Avaaz: The Lobbyist that Masquerades as Online Activism"